I Think, Therefore I Have A Headache
By Martha Bolton
Bethany House
PB, 192 pg. US$9.59
ISBN: 0-7642-2625-8
Chicken soup humor
By Linda A. Prussen-Razzano
web posted June 23, 2003
Martha Bolton, a full-time comedy writer and author of
numerous books, offers up her latest round of light hearted
humor in "I Think, Therefore I Have A Headache." I opened the
book around 4:00 p.m, and before 5:00 p.m., it was over. This
quick moving series of vignettes alternates between poignant and
funny, to repetitive and mundane. Bolton's self-depreciating
humor spans from delightful to somewhat stale and predictable.
Nevertheless, the book is not without its charm.
The opening piece, from which the book derives its title,
promises quick barks of laughter on the first few pages. Woven
delicately into this piece is an underlying tone of seriousness, an
unspoken prompt that we examine the frenzied chaos of our
everyday lives and imagine bigger things.
The second piece, regarding television advertisements for
controversial new drugs, will elicit howls of laughter. Here Bolton
shows her true comedic genius, allowing the reader to vividly
picture the described commercial in all its wonderfully ironic
detail. The piece is brief, bitingly funny, and ends entirely too
soon.
I hummed my way through the next several vignettes, still
interested but not completely engaged. It was not until "A Penny
For Your Thoughts" that Bolton's words grabbed at me again,
with her passionate defense of the penny as a form of currency.
For anyone who has experienced the seemingly never-ending
quest to rid themselves of these self-replicating coins, you will
view your copper friends in an entirely different light.
Several notably humorous moments also occur in "Vacuum-
Sealed Ideas." Think shrink wrap, and let your mind wander. No
more need be said on the matter.
Bolton's humor is clean, wholesome, and family oriented. The
book tries hard to be inoffensive and uplifting, clearly succeeding
in the first and moderately successful in the second. Those who
enjoy the "Chicken Soup" series will find Bolton's book an easy
and pleasant read.
Those who enjoy something sharper or more sardonic may walk
away unsatisfied. In its totality, Bolton shines best when she
steps outside the box. In several chapters, her opening quotes
tend to be funnier than her original material. A number of her
pieces floated quickly through the mind, but like cotton candy,
they were not particularly nourishing to the soul.
Those pieces that made an impression, however, will make a
lasting one.
Linda Prussen-Razzano is frequent contributor to Enter Stage
Right and a number of other online magazines.
Enter Stage Right -- http://www.enterstageright.com